-
41 connect
kə'nekt1) (to join or be joined in some way; to tie or fasten or link together: He connected the radio to the mains; This road connects the two farms; a connecting link; This telephone line connects with the President.) unir, enlazar, conectar2) (to associate in the mind: People tend to connect money with happiness.) asociar•connect vb conectartr[kə'nekt]1 (join, attach - gen) unir, enlazar, conectar; (- wires, cables, pipes) empalmar, conectar; (- rooms, buildings) comunicar, unir; (- cities) unir, conectar■ the new road connects our village with the capital la nueva carretera conecta nuestro pueblo con la capital2 (join to power supply) conectar, enchufar3 (associate) relacionar, asociar4 (on telephone) poner ( with, con)2 (be fitted) estar conectado,-a (to, a)4 familiar (blow, punch) arrearconnect [kə'nɛkt] vi: conectar, enlazar, empalmar, comunicarseconnect vt1) join, link: conectar, unir, juntar, vincular2) relate: relacionar, asociar (ideas)v.• asociar v.• combinar v.• conectar (Electricidad) v.• embragar v.• empalmar v.• encadenar v.• enchufar v.• engarzar v.• entroncar v.• relacionar v.kə'nekt
1.
1)a) ( attach)b) ( link together) \<\<rooms/buildings\>\> comunicar*; \<\<towns\>\> conectarc) ( Telec)I'm trying to connect you — un momento que lo comunico or (Esp) le pongo con el número
d) \<\<phone/gas\>\> conectar2) ( associate) \<\<people/ideas/events\>\> relacionar, asociar
2.
vi1)a) ( be joined together) \<\<rooms\>\> comunicarse*; \<\<pipes\>\> empalmarb) ( be fitted)to connect (TO something) — estar* conectado (a algo)
2) ( Transp)to connect WITH something — \<\<train/flight\>\> enlazar* con algo, conectar con algo (AmL)
•Phrasal Verbs:[kǝ'nekt]1. VT1) (=join) conectar; [+ road, railway, airline] unir; [+ pipes, drains] empalmar (to a)to connect sth (up) to the mains — (Elec) conectar algo a la red eléctrica
2) (=install) [+ cooker, telephone] conectar3) (Telec) [+ caller] poner, comunicar (LAm) ( with con)please connect me with Mr Lyons — póngame con el Sr. Lyons, por favor
"I am trying to connect you" — "estoy intentando ponerle al habla"
4) (=associate) vincular, asociarto connect sth/sb (with) — vincular or asociar algo/a algn (con)
I never connected you with that — nunca te vinculé or asocié con eso, nunca creí que tuvieras nada que ver con eso
2.* * *[kə'nekt]
1.
1)a) ( attach)b) ( link together) \<\<rooms/buildings\>\> comunicar*; \<\<towns\>\> conectarc) ( Telec)I'm trying to connect you — un momento que lo comunico or (Esp) le pongo con el número
d) \<\<phone/gas\>\> conectar2) ( associate) \<\<people/ideas/events\>\> relacionar, asociar
2.
vi1)a) ( be joined together) \<\<rooms\>\> comunicarse*; \<\<pipes\>\> empalmarb) ( be fitted)to connect (TO something) — estar* conectado (a algo)
2) ( Transp)to connect WITH something — \<\<train/flight\>\> enlazar* con algo, conectar con algo (AmL)
•Phrasal Verbs: -
42 share
ʃeə
1. noun1) (one of the parts of something that is divided among several people etc: We all had a share of the cake; We each paid our share of the bill.) parte2) (the part played by a person in something done etc by several people etc: I had no share in the decision.) parte3) (a fixed sum of money invested in a business company by a shareholder.) acción, participación
2. verb1) ((usually with among, between, with) to divide among a number of people: We shared the money between us.) repartir, dividir2) (to have, use etc (something that another person has or uses); to allow someone to use (something one has or owns): The students share a sitting-room; The little boy hated sharing his toys.) compartir3) ((sometimes with in) to have a share of with someone else: He wouldn't let her share the cost of the taxi.) compartir•- share and share alike
share1 n parteshare2 vb1. dividir / repartir2. compartirtr[ʃeəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (portion) parte nombre femenino■ you've already eaten your share! ¡ya te has comido tu parte!2 SMALLFINANCE/SMALL (held by shareholder) acción nombre femenino; (held by partner) participación nombre femenino1 (have or use with others) compartir; (have in common) compartir, tener en común■ can you share one book between two? ¿podéis compartir un libro entre los dos?2 (tell news, feelings, etc) compartir3 (divide) repartir, dividir1 compartir\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLa problem shared is a problem halved las penas compartidas son menos penasto share and share alike compartir las cosasto do one's share hacer su parteto go shares pagar a mediasshare capital capital nombre masculino socialshare price cotización nombre femenino1) apportion: dividir, repartir2) : compartirthey share a room: comparten una habitaciónshare vi: compartirshare n1) portion: parte f, porción fone's fair share: lo que le corresponde a uno2) : acción f (en una compañía)to hold shares: tener accionesn.• acción (Banca) s.f.• aportación s.f.• compartir s.m.• cuota s.f.• cupo s.m.• escote s.m.• lote s.m.• parte s.f.• participación s.f.• quiñón s.m.v.• compartir v.• dividir v.• participar v.• partir v.• repartir v.• sobrellevar v.ʃer, ʃeə(r)
I
1) c ( portion) parte fhow much is my share of the bill? — ¿cuánto me toca pagar a mí?
he's had his share of bad luck — ha tenido bastante mala suerte or su buena cuota de mala suerte
to work on shares — (AmE) trabajar como socios
2) (Busn, Fin)a) ( held by partner) (no pl) participación fb) c ( held by shareholder) acción fto hold shares in a company — tener* acciones en una compañía; (before n)
share capital — capital m social
share certificate — (título m or certificado m de) acción f
share index — índice m de cotización en bolsa
share prices — cotización f de las acciones
II
1.
1)a) ( use jointly)b) ( have in common) \<\<interest/opinion\>\> compartir; \<\<characteristics\>\> tener* en común2)a) ( divide) dividirb) ( communicate) \<\<experience/knowledge\>\> intercambiar
2.
via) ( use jointly) compartiryou may have to share with somebody — puede ser que tengas que compartir la habitación (or el despacho etc) con alguien
b) ( have a part)to share IN something — compartir algo, participar de algo
Phrasal Verbs:
I [ʃɛǝ(r)]1. N1) (=portion) parte f, porción fa share of or in the profits — una proporción de las ganancias
how much will my share be? — ¿cuánto me corresponderá a mí?
your share is £5 — te tocan 5 libras
•
to do one's (fair) share (of sth) — hacer lo que a uno le toca or corresponde (de algo)he doesn't do his share — no hace todo lo que debiera, no hace todo lo que le toca or corresponde
•
to have a share in sth — participar en algowe've had our share of misfortunes — hemos sufrido bastante infortunio, hemos sufrido lo nuestro
•
to take a share in doing sth — hacer su parte en algo2) (Econ) acción f2. VT1) (=split, divide) [+ resource, benefit] repartir, dividir, partirwould you like to share the bottle with me? — ¿quieres compartir la botella conmigo?
2) (=accept equally) [+ duty, responsibility, task] compartir, corresponsabilizarse deto share the blame — [one person] aceptar su parte de culpa; [more than one person] corresponsabilizarse de la culpa
3) (=have in common) [+ characteristic, quality] compartir, tener en común; [+ experience, opinion] compartirtwo nations who share a common language — dos naciones que tienen en común or comparten la misma lengua
it can be beneficial to share your feelings with someone you trust — puede resultar beneficioso compartir or contar tus sentimientos a alguien de confianza
3.VI compartir ( with con)I share with three other women — (room, flat etc) vivo con otras tres mujeres
4.CPDshare capital N — capital m social en acciones
share certificate N — (certificado m or título m de una) acción f
share earnings NPL — dividendos mpl
share index N — índice m de la Bolsa
share issue N — emisión f de acciones
share offer N — oferta f de acciones
share option N — stock option f, opción f sobre acciones
share ownership N — propiedad f de acciones
share premium N — prima f de emisión
share price N — precio m de las acciones
II
[ʃɛǝ(r)]N (Agr) (=ploughshare) reja f* * *[ʃer, ʃeə(r)]
I
1) c ( portion) parte fhow much is my share of the bill? — ¿cuánto me toca pagar a mí?
he's had his share of bad luck — ha tenido bastante mala suerte or su buena cuota de mala suerte
to work on shares — (AmE) trabajar como socios
2) (Busn, Fin)a) ( held by partner) (no pl) participación fb) c ( held by shareholder) acción fto hold shares in a company — tener* acciones en una compañía; (before n)
share capital — capital m social
share certificate — (título m or certificado m de) acción f
share index — índice m de cotización en bolsa
share prices — cotización f de las acciones
II
1.
1)a) ( use jointly)b) ( have in common) \<\<interest/opinion\>\> compartir; \<\<characteristics\>\> tener* en común2)a) ( divide) dividirb) ( communicate) \<\<experience/knowledge\>\> intercambiar
2.
via) ( use jointly) compartiryou may have to share with somebody — puede ser que tengas que compartir la habitación (or el despacho etc) con alguien
b) ( have a part)to share IN something — compartir algo, participar de algo
Phrasal Verbs: -
43 connect
1. transitive verb1) verbinden (to, with mit); (Electr.) anschließen (to, with an + Akk.)2) (associate) verbindenconnect something with something — etwas mit etwas verbinden od. in Verbindung bringen
2. intransitive verbbe connected with somebody/something — mit jemandem/etwas in Verbindung stehen
connect with something — mit etwas zusammenhängen od. verbunden sein; [Zug, Schiff usw.:] Anschluss haben an etwas (Akk.)
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/85649/connect_up">connect up* * *[kə'nekt]1) (to join or be joined in some way; to tie or fasten or link together: He connected the radio to the mains; This road connects the two farms; a connecting link; This telephone line connects with the President.) verbinden2) (to associate in the mind: People tend to connect money with happiness.) verbinden•* * *con·nect[kəˈnekt]I. vi1. (plug in)where does the cooker \connect to the electricity? wo ist der Anschluss für den Herd?; (have contact) wires etc. Kontakt haben2. (form network)3. AVIAT, RAIL4. (feel affinity)6. (join) miteinander verbunden seinII. vt1. ELEC, COMPUT▪ to \connect sth (join) etw verbinden (to/with mit + dat); (plug in) etw anschließen (to/with an + akk)▪ to \connect sth together etw miteinander verbindento be \connected to the mains ELEC ans Stromnetz angeschlossen sein3. (make accessible)4. (associate, relate)▪ to \connect sb/sth jdn/etw miteinander in Zusammenhang [o Verbindung] bringen▪ to \connect sb jdn verbindencould you \connect me with Paris please? könnten Sie mich bitte mit Paris verbinden?I'll \connect you ich verbinde [Sie]* * *[kə'nekt]1. vt1) (= join) verbinden (to, with mit); (ELEC ETC also connect up) appliances, subscribers anschließen (to an +acc)to be connected (two things) — miteinander verbunden sein; (several things) untereinander verbunden sein
See:→ parallel2) (fig: associate) in Verbindung or Zusammenhang bringen3) (esp pass = link) ideas, theories etc verbindento be connected with — eine Beziehung haben zu, in einer Beziehung or in Verbindung stehen zu
he's connected with the BBC/university — er hat mit der BBC/der Universität zu tun
to be connected (ideas etc) — in Beziehung zueinander stehen; (firms) geschäftlich miteinander verbunden sein
loosely connected facts — lose verknüpfte Fakten
2. vito connect with sb/sb's ideas — jdn/jds Gedanken verstehen
connecting rooms — angrenzende Zimmer pl (mit Verbindungstür)
2) (RAIL, AVIAT ETC) Anschluss haben (with an +acc)with +acc)* * *connect [kəˈnekt]A v/twith mit)with mit):connect ideas Gedanken verknüpfen;a) in Verbindung treten (mit),b) in verwandtschaftliche Beziehungen treten (zu)4. (to) ELEK anschließen (an akk), verbinden (mit), (zu)schalten (dat), Kontakt herstellen zwischen (dat)connect sb further jemanden weiterverbinden;be connected verbunden seinB v/i1. in Verbindung treten oder stehen:are we connecting? bes US umg verstehen wir uns?, sind wir uns einig?2. in (logischem) Zusammenhang stehen ( with mit)4. Boxen etc: umg treffen:connect with a blow einen Schlag landen* * *1. transitive verb1) verbinden (to, with mit); (Electr.) anschließen (to, with an + Akk.)2) (associate) verbindenconnect something with something — etwas mit etwas verbinden od. in Verbindung bringen
2. intransitive verbbe connected with somebody/something — mit jemandem/etwas in Verbindung stehen
connect with something — mit etwas zusammenhängen od. verbunden sein; [Zug, Schiff usw.:] Anschluss haben an etwas (Akk.)
Phrasal Verbs:* * *(to) v.verbinden (mit) v. v.anschließen v.verbinden v. -
44 link
liŋk
1. noun1) (a ring of a chain: There was a worn link in the chain and it broke; an important link in the chain of the evidence.) eslabón2) (anything connecting two things: His job was to act as a link between the government and the press.) enlace, vínculo, lazo
2. verb(to connect as by a link: The new train service links the suburbs with the heart of the city.) unir, conectar- link uplink1 n1. eslabón2. enlace / conexiónthe rail link between the airport and the city el enlace ferroviario entre el aeropuerto y la ciudad3. vínculo / lazo / relaciónthere is a link between smoking and lung cancer hay una relación entre el tabaco y el cáncer de pulmónlink2 vb1. unir / conectar2. vincular / relacionarthe police suspect that the two crimes may be linked la policía sospecha que los dos crímenes estén relacionadostr[lɪŋk]1 (in chain) eslabón nombre masculino2 (connection) enlace nombre masculino3 figurative use vínculo, lazo1 unir, conectar2 figurative use vincular, relacionar1 campo m sing de golf\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto link arms tomarse del brazoweak link figurative use punto débillink ['lɪŋk] vt: unir, enlazar, conectarlink vito link up : unirse, conectarlink n1) : eslabón m (de una cadena)2) bond: conexión f, lazo m, vínculo mn.• campo de golf s.m.• enlace s.m.• eslabón s.m.• nexo s.m.v.• engarzar v.• engazar v.• enlazar (Teléfono) v.• eslabonar v.• ligar v.lɪŋk
I
1)a) ( in chain) eslabón mthe missing link — ( Anthrop) el eslabón perdido
b) cuff link2)a) ( connection) conexión fb) (tie, bond) vínculo m, lazo mc) (Telec, Transp) conexión f, enlace mrail/air link — conexión ferroviaria/aérea
d) ( Comput) (between programs, terminals) enlace m; ( in compilation) montaje m
II
1.
a) \<\<components\>\> unir, enlazar*; \<\<terminals\>\> conectarto link arms — tomarse or (esp Esp) cogerse* del brazo
b) \<\<buildings/towns\>\> unir, conectarc) \<\<facts/events\>\> relacionarto link something TO/WITH something — relacionar algo con algo
2.
via) link up 1)b) (Comput, Telec)to link INTO something — conectar or enlazar* con algo
Phrasal Verbs:- link up[lɪŋk]1. N1) [of chain] eslabón mthe last link in the chain — (fig) el último eslabón en la cadena
•
the missing link — (fig) el eslabón perdido2) (=connection) relación f, conexión fthe link between smoking and lung cancer — la relación or conexión entre el tabaco y el cáncer de pulmón
3) (=tie, association) vínculo m, lazo m•
to have links with sth/sb — tener vínculos or lazos con algo/algnwe now have closer links with overseas universities — ahora tenemos vínculos or lazos más estrechos con universidades extranjeras
4) (Travel) enlace m, conexión frail/air/road links — enlaces mpl ferroviarios/aéreos/por carretera, conexiones fpl ferroviarias/aéreas/por carretera
5) (Telec, TV, Rad)radio/telephone/satellite link — conexión f radiofónica/telefónica/vía satélite
6) (Internet) enlace m ; links2. VT1) (=join, connect) [+ parts, units] unir (to a); conectar (to con); [+ computers] conectar (to con); [+ towns, buildings] comunicar, conectarthe Channel Tunnel links Britain and France — el túnel del Canal de la Mancha comunica or conecta Gran Bretaña con Francia, el túnel del Canal de la Mancha une a Gran Bretaña y Francia
•
to link arms — tomarse del brazo, cogerse del brazo (Sp)•
to be linked into a system — (Comput) estar conectado a un sistema2) (=relate) relacionarthe evidence linking smoking with early death — las pruebas que relacionan or que establecen una relación entre el tabaco y las muertes prematuras
there is evidence linking the group to a series of terrorist attacks — hay pruebas que implican al grupo en una serie de atentados terroristas
3. VI1)• to link together — [parts, components] encajar
2)• to link into sth — (Comput) conectar con algo
- link up* * *[lɪŋk]
I
1)a) ( in chain) eslabón mthe missing link — ( Anthrop) el eslabón perdido
b) cuff link2)a) ( connection) conexión fb) (tie, bond) vínculo m, lazo mc) (Telec, Transp) conexión f, enlace mrail/air link — conexión ferroviaria/aérea
d) ( Comput) (between programs, terminals) enlace m; ( in compilation) montaje m
II
1.
a) \<\<components\>\> unir, enlazar*; \<\<terminals\>\> conectarto link arms — tomarse or (esp Esp) cogerse* del brazo
b) \<\<buildings/towns\>\> unir, conectarc) \<\<facts/events\>\> relacionarto link something TO/WITH something — relacionar algo con algo
2.
via) link up 1)b) (Comput, Telec)to link INTO something — conectar or enlazar* con algo
Phrasal Verbs:- link up -
45 Language
Philosophy is written in that great book, the universe, which is always open, right before our eyes. But one cannot understand this book without first learning to understand the language and to know the characters in which it is written. It is written in the language of mathematics, and the characters are triangles, circles, and other figures. Without these, one cannot understand a single word of it, and just wanders in a dark labyrinth. (Galileo, 1990, p. 232)It never happens that it [a nonhuman animal] arranges its speech in various ways in order to reply appropriately to everything that may be said in its presence, as even the lowest type of man can do. (Descartes, 1970a, p. 116)It is a very remarkable fact that there are none so depraved and stupid, without even excepting idiots, that they cannot arrange different words together, forming of them a statement by which they make known their thoughts; while, on the other hand, there is no other animal, however perfect and fortunately circumstanced it may be, which can do the same. (Descartes, 1967, p. 116)Human beings do not live in the object world alone, nor alone in the world of social activity as ordinarily understood, but are very much at the mercy of the particular language which has become the medium of expression for their society. It is quite an illusion to imagine that one adjusts to reality essentially without the use of language and that language is merely an incidental means of solving specific problems of communication or reflection. The fact of the matter is that the "real world" is to a large extent unconsciously built on the language habits of the group.... We see and hear and otherwise experience very largely as we do because the language habits of our community predispose certain choices of interpretation. (Sapir, 1921, p. 75)It powerfully conditions all our thinking about social problems and processes.... No two languages are ever sufficiently similar to be considered as representing the same social reality. The worlds in which different societies live are distinct worlds, not merely the same worlds with different labels attached. (Sapir, 1985, p. 162)[A list of language games, not meant to be exhaustive:]Giving orders, and obeying them- Describing the appearance of an object, or giving its measurements- Constructing an object from a description (a drawing)Reporting an eventSpeculating about an eventForming and testing a hypothesisPresenting the results of an experiment in tables and diagramsMaking up a story; and reading itPlay actingSinging catchesGuessing riddlesMaking a joke; and telling itSolving a problem in practical arithmeticTranslating from one language into anotherLANGUAGE Asking, thanking, cursing, greeting, and praying-. (Wittgenstein, 1953, Pt. I, No. 23, pp. 11 e-12 e)We dissect nature along lines laid down by our native languages.... The world is presented in a kaleidoscopic flux of impressions which has to be organized by our minds-and this means largely by the linguistic systems in our minds.... No individual is free to describe nature with absolute impartiality but is constrained to certain modes of interpretation even while he thinks himself most free. (Whorf, 1956, pp. 153, 213-214)We dissect nature along the lines laid down by our native languages.The categories and types that we isolate from the world of phenomena we do not find there because they stare every observer in the face; on the contrary, the world is presented in a kaleidoscopic flux of impressions which has to be organized by our minds-and this means largely by the linguistic systems in our minds.... We are thus introduced to a new principle of relativity, which holds that all observers are not led by the same physical evidence to the same picture of the universe, unless their linguistic backgrounds are similar or can in some way be calibrated. (Whorf, 1956, pp. 213-214)9) The Forms of a Person's Thoughts Are Controlled by Unperceived Patterns of His Own LanguageThe forms of a person's thoughts are controlled by inexorable laws of pattern of which he is unconscious. These patterns are the unperceived intricate systematizations of his own language-shown readily enough by a candid comparison and contrast with other languages, especially those of a different linguistic family. (Whorf, 1956, p. 252)It has come to be commonly held that many utterances which look like statements are either not intended at all, or only intended in part, to record or impart straightforward information about the facts.... Many traditional philosophical perplexities have arisen through a mistake-the mistake of taking as straightforward statements of fact utterances which are either (in interesting non-grammatical ways) nonsensical or else intended as something quite different. (Austin, 1962, pp. 2-3)In general, one might define a complex of semantic components connected by logical constants as a concept. The dictionary of a language is then a system of concepts in which a phonological form and certain syntactic and morphological characteristics are assigned to each concept. This system of concepts is structured by several types of relations. It is supplemented, furthermore, by redundancy or implicational rules..., representing general properties of the whole system of concepts.... At least a relevant part of these general rules is not bound to particular languages, but represents presumably universal structures of natural languages. They are not learned, but are rather a part of the human ability to acquire an arbitrary natural language. (Bierwisch, 1970, pp. 171-172)In studying the evolution of mind, we cannot guess to what extent there are physically possible alternatives to, say, transformational generative grammar, for an organism meeting certain other physical conditions characteristic of humans. Conceivably, there are none-or very few-in which case talk about evolution of the language capacity is beside the point. (Chomsky, 1972, p. 98)[It is] truth value rather than syntactic well-formedness that chiefly governs explicit verbal reinforcement by parents-which renders mildly paradoxical the fact that the usual product of such a training schedule is an adult whose speech is highly grammatical but not notably truthful. (R. O. Brown, 1973, p. 330)he conceptual base is responsible for formally representing the concepts underlying an utterance.... A given word in a language may or may not have one or more concepts underlying it.... On the sentential level, the utterances of a given language are encoded within a syntactic structure of that language. The basic construction of the sentential level is the sentence.The next highest level... is the conceptual level. We call the basic construction of this level the conceptualization. A conceptualization consists of concepts and certain relations among those concepts. We can consider that both levels exist at the same point in time and that for any unit on one level, some corresponding realizate exists on the other level. This realizate may be null or extremely complex.... Conceptualizations may relate to other conceptualizations by nesting or other specified relationships. (Schank, 1973, pp. 191-192)The mathematics of multi-dimensional interactive spaces and lattices, the projection of "computer behavior" on to possible models of cerebral functions, the theoretical and mechanical investigation of artificial intelligence, are producing a stream of sophisticated, often suggestive ideas.But it is, I believe, fair to say that nothing put forward until now in either theoretic design or mechanical mimicry comes even remotely in reach of the most rudimentary linguistic realities. (Steiner, 1975, p. 284)The step from the simple tool to the master tool, a tool to make tools (what we would now call a machine tool), seems to me indeed to parallel the final step to human language, which I call reconstitution. It expresses in a practical and social context the same understanding of hierarchy, and shows the same analysis by function as a basis for synthesis. (Bronowski, 1977, pp. 127-128)t is the language donn eґ in which we conduct our lives.... We have no other. And the danger is that formal linguistic models, in their loosely argued analogy with the axiomatic structure of the mathematical sciences, may block perception.... It is quite conceivable that, in language, continuous induction from simple, elemental units to more complex, realistic forms is not justified. The extent and formal "undecidability" of context-and every linguistic particle above the level of the phoneme is context-bound-may make it impossible, except in the most abstract, meta-linguistic sense, to pass from "pro-verbs," "kernals," or "deep deep structures" to actual speech. (Steiner, 1975, pp. 111-113)A higher-level formal language is an abstract machine. (Weizenbaum, 1976, p. 113)Jakobson sees metaphor and metonymy as the characteristic modes of binarily opposed polarities which between them underpin the two-fold process of selection and combination by which linguistic signs are formed.... Thus messages are constructed, as Saussure said, by a combination of a "horizontal" movement, which combines words together, and a "vertical" movement, which selects the particular words from the available inventory or "inner storehouse" of the language. The combinative (or syntagmatic) process manifests itself in contiguity (one word being placed next to another) and its mode is metonymic. The selective (or associative) process manifests itself in similarity (one word or concept being "like" another) and its mode is metaphoric. The "opposition" of metaphor and metonymy therefore may be said to represent in effect the essence of the total opposition between the synchronic mode of language (its immediate, coexistent, "vertical" relationships) and its diachronic mode (its sequential, successive, lineal progressive relationships). (Hawkes, 1977, pp. 77-78)It is striking that the layered structure that man has given to language constantly reappears in his analyses of nature. (Bronowski, 1977, p. 121)First, [an ideal intertheoretic reduction] provides us with a set of rules"correspondence rules" or "bridge laws," as the standard vernacular has it-which effect a mapping of the terms of the old theory (T o) onto a subset of the expressions of the new or reducing theory (T n). These rules guide the application of those selected expressions of T n in the following way: we are free to make singular applications of their correspondencerule doppelgangers in T o....Second, and equally important, a successful reduction ideally has the outcome that, under the term mapping effected by the correspondence rules, the central principles of T o (those of semantic and systematic importance) are mapped onto general sentences of T n that are theorems of Tn. (P. Churchland, 1979, p. 81)If non-linguistic factors must be included in grammar: beliefs, attitudes, etc. [this would] amount to a rejection of the initial idealization of language as an object of study. A priori such a move cannot be ruled out, but it must be empirically motivated. If it proves to be correct, I would conclude that language is a chaos that is not worth studying.... Note that the question is not whether beliefs or attitudes, and so on, play a role in linguistic behavior and linguistic judgments... [but rather] whether distinct cognitive structures can be identified, which interact in the real use of language and linguistic judgments, the grammatical system being one of these. (Chomsky, 1979, pp. 140, 152-153)23) Language Is Inevitably Influenced by Specific Contexts of Human InteractionLanguage cannot be studied in isolation from the investigation of "rationality." It cannot afford to neglect our everyday assumptions concerning the total behavior of a reasonable person.... An integrational linguistics must recognize that human beings inhabit a communicational space which is not neatly compartmentalized into language and nonlanguage.... It renounces in advance the possibility of setting up systems of forms and meanings which will "account for" a central core of linguistic behavior irrespective of the situation and communicational purposes involved. (Harris, 1981, p. 165)By innate [linguistic knowledge], Chomsky simply means "genetically programmed." He does not literally think that children are born with language in their heads ready to be spoken. He merely claims that a "blueprint is there, which is brought into use when the child reaches a certain point in her general development. With the help of this blueprint, she analyzes the language she hears around her more readily than she would if she were totally unprepared for the strange gabbling sounds which emerge from human mouths. (Aitchison, 1987, p. 31)Looking at ourselves from the computer viewpoint, we cannot avoid seeing that natural language is our most important "programming language." This means that a vast portion of our knowledge and activity is, for us, best communicated and understood in our natural language.... One could say that natural language was our first great original artifact and, since, as we increasingly realize, languages are machines, so natural language, with our brains to run it, was our primal invention of the universal computer. One could say this except for the sneaking suspicion that language isn't something we invented but something we became, not something we constructed but something in which we created, and recreated, ourselves. (Leiber, 1991, p. 8)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Language
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46 strange
adjective1) (peculiar) seltsam; sonderbar; merkwürdigfeel [very] strange — sich [ganz] komisch fühlen
it feels strange to do something — es ist ein merkwürdiges od. komisches Gefühl, wenn man etwas tut
2) (alien, unfamiliar) fremd3) (unaccustomed)strange to something — nicht vertraut mit etwas
* * *[strein‹]1) (not known, seen etc before; unfamiliar or foreign: What would you do if you found a strange man in your house?; Whenever you're in a strange country, you should take the opportunity of learning the language.) fremd•- academic.ru/92156/strangely">strangely- strangeness
- stranger
- strange to say/tell/relate
- strangely enough* * *[streɪnʤ]1. (peculiar, odd) sonderbar, merkwürdig; (unusual) ungewöhnlich, außergewöhnlich; (weird) unheimlich, seltsamI had a \strange feeling that we'd met before ich hatte irgendwie das Gefühl, dass wir uns schon einmal begegnet waren\stranger things have happened da sind schon ganz andere Dinge passiertit's \strange that... es ist schon merkwürdig, dass...\strange accent sonderbarer [o komischer] Akzent2. (exceptional) erstaunlich, bemerkenswertyou say the \strangest things sometimes manchmal sagen Sie die erstaunlichsten Dingea \strange coincidence ein seltsamer Zufalla \strange twist of fate eine besondere Laune des Schicksals\strange to say seltsamerweise\strange to say, I don't really like strawberries es ist kaum zu glauben, aber ich mag Erdbeeren nicht besondersto feel \strange sich akk unwohl [o schlecht] fühlenI hope that fish was all right — my stomach feels a bit \strange ich hoffe, der Fisch war in Ordnung — mir ist so komischI never sleep well in a \strange bed ich schlafe in fremden Betten grundsätzlich schlecht\strange face unbekanntes Gesicht5.▶ to make \strange bedfellows ein seltsames Paar [o Gespann] abgeben* * *[streIndZ]adj (+er)1) seltsam, sonderbar, merkwürdigto think/find it strange that... — es seltsam finden, dass...
strange as it may seem... — so seltsam es auch scheinen mag,...
for some strange reason — aus irgendeinem unerfindlichen or seltsamen Grund
the strange thing is (that)... — das Seltsame ist, dass...
he told me the strangest story — er erzählte mir eine sehr seltsame etc Geschichte
by a strange chance or coincidence —
strange to say — so seltsam es klingen mag
2) (= unfamiliar) country, surroundings, bed fremd; (= unusual, unaccustomed) work, activity nicht vertraut, ungewohntI felt rather strange at first — zuerst fühlte ich mich ziemlich fremd
to be strange to sb —
the boys are strange to the school — die Schule ist den Jungen noch nicht vertraut or noch fremd
* * *strange [streındʒ]A adj (adv strangely)1. seltsam, eigenartig, -tümlich, sonderbar, merkwürdig, komisch:strange to say, strangely enough seltsamer-, merkwürdigerweise2. fremd, neu, unbekannt, ungewohnt, nicht geläufig ( alle:to sb jemandem)4. reserviert, kühl5. strange particles PHYS Strange Particles (Elementarteilchen, deren Strangeness ungleich null ist)B adv umg → A 1* * *adjective1) (peculiar) seltsam; sonderbar; merkwürdigfeel [very] strange — sich [ganz] komisch fühlen
it feels strange to do something — es ist ein merkwürdiges od. komisches Gefühl, wenn man etwas tut
2) (alien, unfamiliar) fremd* * *adj.befremdend adj.befremdlich adj.eigenartig adj.fremd adj.komisch adj.seltsam adj.skurril adj.sonderbar adj. -
47 bear
I beə past tense - bore; verb1) ((usually with cannot, could not etc) to put up with or endure: I couldn't bear it if he left.) aguantar, soportar2) (to be able to support: Will the table bear my weight?) aguantar3) ((past participle in passive born bo:n) to produce (children): She has borne (him) several children; She was born on July 7.) dar a luz, parir4) (to carry: He was borne shoulder-high after his victory.) cargar, llevar5) (to have: The cheque bore his signature.) llevar6) (to turn or fork: The road bears left here.) desviarse•- bearable- bearer
- bearing
- bearings
- bear down on
- bear fruit
- bear out
- bear up
- bear with
- find/get one's bearings
- lose one's bearings
II beə noun(a large heavy animal with thick fur and hooked claws.) oso- bearskinbear1 n osobear2 vb aguantar / soportar / resistirto bear in mind tener en cuenta / tener presentetr[beəSMALLr/SMALL]1 SMALLZOOLOGY/SMALL oso2 SMALLFINANCE/SMALL bajista nombre masulino o femenino, especulador,-ra a la baja3 (rough person) bruto1 SMALLFINANCE/SMALL vender al iniciarse una bajada de precios para volver a comprar luego a un precio más bajo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto be like a bear with a sore head estar de un humor de perrosbear hug apretujón nombre masculino, abrazo muy fuertebear account posición nombre femenino de vendedorbear cub SMALLZOOLOGY/SMALL oseznogrizzly bear oso pardothe Great Bear la Osa Mayorthe Little Bear la Osa Menor————————tr[beəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (carry) llevar2 (name, date) llevar3 (show signs of) mostrar, revelar4 (weight) soportar, aguantar; (responsibility, cost) asumir5 (tolerate) soportar, aguantar■ how do you bear the job? ¿cómo aguantas el trabajo?6 (fruit) producir7 SMALLFINANCE/SMALL (interest) devengar8 (give birth) tener, dar a luz1 (turn) torcer a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto bear in mind tener presenteto bear a grudge guardar rencorto bear a resemblance to parecerse ato bear hard on oprimirto bear witness to something ser testigo de algoto bear no relation to no tener nada que ver conto bring pressure to bear ejercer presión (on, a), presionar (on, a)it doesn't bear thinking about me da escalofríos nada más pensar en ello1) carry: llevar, portar2) : dar a luz a (un niño)3) produce: dar (frutas, cosechas)4) endure, support: soportar, resistir, aguantarbear vi1) turn: doblar, dar la vueltabear right: doble a la derecha2)to bear up : resistiradj.• bajista adj.n.• bajista s.m.,f.• oso s.m.v.• apoyar v.• cargar v.• gobernar v.• llevar v.• parir v.• partir v.• permitir v.• producir v.(§pres: produzco, produces...) pret: produj-•)• resistir v.• sentir v.• sobrellevar v.• soportar v.• sufrir v.
I
1. ber, beə(r)1)a) ( support) \<\<weight\>\> aguantar, resistir; \<\<cost\>\> correr con; \<\<responsibility\>\> cargar* conb) ( endure) \<\<pain/uncertainty\>\> soportar, aguantarc) (put up with, stand) (colloq) (with can) \<\<person\>\> aguantar (fam), soportar; \<\<noise\>\> aguantar, soportarI can't bear her — no la soporto, no la aguanto or no la puedo ver (fam)
to bear to + inf: I can't bear to watch! — no puedo mirar
d) ( stand up to)2)a) ( carry) (liter) \<\<banner/coffin\>\> llevar, portar (liter)b) ( harbor)she's not one to bear a grudge — no es rencorosa or resentida
3) (have, show) \<\<title/signature\>\> llevar; \<\<scars\>\> tener*; \<\<resemblance\>\> tener*, guardarhis account bears little relation to the truth — su versión tiene poco que ver or guarda poca relación con la verdad
4)a) ( produce) \<\<fruit/crop\>\> dar*; \<\<interest\>\> devengar*b) ( give birth to) \<\<child\>\> dar* a luzshe bore him six children — (liter) le dio seis hijos (liter); see also born I
2.
via) ( turn) torcer*bear left/right — tuerza or doble a la izquierda/derecha
b) ( weigh down) (frml)to bear on somebody: the responsibility bore heavily on her — la responsabilidad pesaba sobre sus hombros; bring 2) a)
3.
v refl (frml)a) (hold, carry)there's something very distinguished about the way he bears himself — tiene un porte muy distinguido
b) ( behave)to bear oneself — comportarse, conducirse* (frml)
Phrasal Verbs:- bear out- bear up
II
noun oso, osa m,fhe's a regular bear in the morning — (AmE) por las mañanas está de un humor de perros
to be like a bear with a sore head — (colloq) estar* de un humor de perros (fam)
to be loaded for bear — (AmE colloq) estar* listo para el ataque; (before n)
I [bɛǝ(r)]1. N1) (=animal) oso(-a) m / f ; (fig) (=man) grandullón * mthe Great/Little Bear — la Osa Mayor/Menor
- be like a bear with a sore head- be loaded for bearbrown 5., grizzly, polar2) (also: teddy bear) osito m de peluche3) (Econ) (=pessimistic trader) bajista mf2.CPDbear baiting N — espectáculo en el que se azuzan a unos perros contra un oso
bear garden N — (fig) manicomio m, casa f de locos
bear hug N — fuerte abrazo m
bear market N — (Econ) mercado m bajista
bear pit N — (fig) manicomio m, casa f de locos
II [bɛǝ(r)] (pt bore) (pp borne)1. VT2) (=take on) [+ cost] correr con, pagar; [+ responsibility] cargar con; (fig) [+ burden] soportarthe government bears some responsibility for this crisis — el gobierno tiene parte de responsabilidad en esta crisis
they bear most of the responsibility for elderly relatives — cargan con la mayor parte de la responsabilidad de atender a familiares ancianos
3) (=endure) [+ pain, suspense] soportar, aguantarI can't bear the suspense — no puedo soportar or aguantar el suspense
bruntI can't bear him — no lo puedo ver, no lo soporto or aguanto
4) (=bring) [+ news, gift] traer5) (=carry) llevar, portar literprotesters bearing placards — manifestantes mfpl llevando or portando pancartas
to bear arms — frm portar armas frm
he bore himself like a soldier — (posture) tenía un porte soldadesco; (behaviour) se comportó como un verdadero soldado
6) (=have, display) [+ signature, date, message, title] llevar; [+ mark, scar] conservarshe bore no resemblance to the girl I knew 20 years ago — no se parecía en nada a la chica que había conocido 20 años atrás
the room bore all the signs of a violent struggle — el cuarto conservaba todas las huellas de una riña violenta
witness 1., 2), mind 1., 3)she bears him no ill-will — (grudge) no le guarda rencor; (hostility) no siente ninguna animadversión hacia él
7) (=stand up to) [+ examination] resistirthe film bears comparison with far more expensive productions — la película puede compararse con producciones mucho más caras
2. VI1) (=move)to bear (to the) right/left — torcer or girar a la derecha/izquierda
2)bringto bear on sth — (=relate to) guardar relación con algo, tener que ver con algo; (=influence) influir en algo
3) (=afflict)- bear off- bear on- bear out- bear up* * *
I
1. [ber, beə(r)]1)a) ( support) \<\<weight\>\> aguantar, resistir; \<\<cost\>\> correr con; \<\<responsibility\>\> cargar* conb) ( endure) \<\<pain/uncertainty\>\> soportar, aguantarc) (put up with, stand) (colloq) (with can) \<\<person\>\> aguantar (fam), soportar; \<\<noise\>\> aguantar, soportarI can't bear her — no la soporto, no la aguanto or no la puedo ver (fam)
to bear to + inf: I can't bear to watch! — no puedo mirar
d) ( stand up to)2)a) ( carry) (liter) \<\<banner/coffin\>\> llevar, portar (liter)b) ( harbor)she's not one to bear a grudge — no es rencorosa or resentida
3) (have, show) \<\<title/signature\>\> llevar; \<\<scars\>\> tener*; \<\<resemblance\>\> tener*, guardarhis account bears little relation to the truth — su versión tiene poco que ver or guarda poca relación con la verdad
4)a) ( produce) \<\<fruit/crop\>\> dar*; \<\<interest\>\> devengar*b) ( give birth to) \<\<child\>\> dar* a luzshe bore him six children — (liter) le dio seis hijos (liter); see also born I
2.
via) ( turn) torcer*bear left/right — tuerza or doble a la izquierda/derecha
b) ( weigh down) (frml)to bear on somebody: the responsibility bore heavily on her — la responsabilidad pesaba sobre sus hombros; bring 2) a)
3.
v refl (frml)a) (hold, carry)there's something very distinguished about the way he bears himself — tiene un porte muy distinguido
b) ( behave)to bear oneself — comportarse, conducirse* (frml)
Phrasal Verbs:- bear out- bear up
II
noun oso, osa m,fhe's a regular bear in the morning — (AmE) por las mañanas está de un humor de perros
to be like a bear with a sore head — (colloq) estar* de un humor de perros (fam)
to be loaded for bear — (AmE colloq) estar* listo para el ataque; (before n)
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48 pertain
tr[pɜː'teɪn]1 formal use (connected with) estar relacionado,-a (to, con)2 SMALLLAW/SMALL (belong to) pertenecer (to, a)pertain [pər'teɪn] vi1) belong: pertenecer (a)2) relate: estar relacionado (con)v.• pertenecer v.pɜːr'teɪn, pɜː'teɪnintransitive verb (frml)to pertain to something — ( have to do with) concernir a algo
[pɜː'teɪn]VI frmto pertain to — (=concern) concernir a, estar relacionado con; (=belong to) pertenecer a; (=be the province of) incumbir a
* * *[pɜːr'teɪn, pɜː'teɪn]intransitive verb (frml)to pertain to something — ( have to do with) concernir a algo
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49 refer
rə'fə: 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) vise til, nevne2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) (hen)vise til, angå, vedrøre3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) henvise til4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) slå opp i, se etter•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) dømme- reference book
- reference libraryverb \/rɪˈfɜː\/1) henvise, remittere2) henvise noen til, sende\/dirigere noen til, råde noen til å vende seg til, gi noen henvisning til3) henføre, regne med blant, plassere• organisms which some scientists refer to animals, some refer to plants• historians refer the fall of Rome to 410 A.D.historikere mener at Roma falt i 410 e.Kr.4) tilskrive, legge skylden på5) angå, vedrøre6) overføre til7) (skolevesen, om prøve) strykeabove referred to ovennevnt, tidligere nevntrefer to henvise til, referere til, påberope (seg på), appellere til, vende seg tilsikte til, referere seg til, med hensyn til hentyde til, tilsikte, mene, antyde, omtale• are you referring to me?referred pain ( medisin) overført smerte -
50 refer
[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) vísa til, minnast á2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) varða3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) vísa til4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) leita til/í•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) dæma- reference book
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51 refer
vizsgahalasztást ad, említ, folyamodik, tulajdonít* * *[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) utal vkire, vmire2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) vonatkozik vkire, vmire3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) vkit, vmit vkihez küld4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) utánanéz•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) vezet (mérkőzést)- reference book
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52 refer
[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) referir-se a2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) reportar-se a3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) enviar4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) consultar•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) arbitrar- reference book
- reference library* * *re.fer[rif'ə:] vt+vi (ps, pp referred) 1 referir, aludir, reportar. the minister often refers to the Bible / o pastor ou sacerdote freqüentemente faz alusão à Bíblia. 2 encaminhar, dirigir, apresentar. he was referred to the association for assistance / ele foi encaminhado à associação para obter auxílio. 3 recorrer. 4 submeter, entregar (para julgamento). 5 atribuir. 6 aplicar. the rule refers to special cases / o regulamento se aplica a casos especiais. to refer one’s failure to bad luck atribuir o insucesso à má sorte. to refer the case to a judge entregar o caso a um juiz. to refer to a dictionary recorrer a um dicionário. -
53 refer
v. göndermek, sevketmek, ait olmak, ilgili olmak, atfetmek, kastetmek, ima etmek, ait saymak, başvurmak, bakmak, yararlanmak, bahsetmek, değinmek* * *başvur* * *[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.)...-den söz etmek,...-e ilişkin olmak2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) olmak3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.)...-e göndermek4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.)...-e bakmak•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) hakemlik yapmak- reference book
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54 refer
[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) omeniti2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) nanašati se3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) napotiti4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) pogledati (v)•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) soditi- reference book
- reference library* * *[rifɜ:]1.transitive verbnapotiti (to k, na), opozoriti (to na); predložiti, pripisovati kaj (to s.o. komu); predati, prepustiti, dodeliti (to komu);2.intransitive verbnanašati se (to na), tikati se (to česa); sklicevati se (to na), obrniti se na, zateči se k; kazati na, posredno misliti na, namigovati (to na), omenitito refer oneself to — prepustiti se, predati se, zaupati se, zaupno se obrniti na, zanesti se nareferred to — ki se nanaša na; o komer (čemer) je govorthe point referred to — omenjena, tista točkato refer to drawer — (kratica: R.D.) obrazec, ki ga banka napiše na ček, ki nima denarnega kritjato refer a matter to arbitration — prepustiti zadevo arbitraži, razsodišču -
55 refer
• ohjata• neuvoa• vedota• viitata• viitata johonkin• etsiä jostakin• esittää• alistaa• katsoa johtuvan• katsoa• jättää• mainita• tarkoittaa• kääntyä puoleen• koskea• lykätä• lähettää* * *rə'fə: 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) mainita2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) koskea3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) jättää jonkun päätettäväksi4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) tarkistaa•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) toimia erotuomarina- reference book
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56 refer
[rɪ'fɜː(r)] 1.1) (pass on) affidare [task, problem, enquiry]2) dir. rimettere, deferire [ case]3) (direct)to refer sb. to — [critic, text] rinviare qcn. a [article, footnote]; [ person] indirizzare qcn. in [ department]
2.to be referred to a specialist — med. essere mandato da uno specialista
1) (allude to)to refer to — riferirsi a, parlare di [person, topic, event]
2) (as name, label)3) (signify)to refer to — [number, date, term] riferirsi a
to refer to — consultare [notes, article]
5) (apply)* * *[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) alludere2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) riferirsi3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) affidare4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) consultare•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) arbitrare- reference book
- reference library* * *[rɪ'fɜː(r)] 1.1) (pass on) affidare [task, problem, enquiry]2) dir. rimettere, deferire [ case]3) (direct)to refer sb. to — [critic, text] rinviare qcn. a [article, footnote]; [ person] indirizzare qcn. in [ department]
2.to be referred to a specialist — med. essere mandato da uno specialista
1) (allude to)to refer to — riferirsi a, parlare di [person, topic, event]
2) (as name, label)3) (signify)to refer to — [number, date, term] riferirsi a
to refer to — consultare [notes, article]
5) (apply) -
57 strange
[streɪndʒ]1) (unfamiliar) sconosciuto, ignoto, estraneo2) (odd) strano, bizzarro, curiosoit is strange (that)... — è strano che...
there's something strange about her — c'è qualcosa di strano o curioso in lei
in a strange way... — stranamente...
3) (unwell)4) form. (new)to be strange to — essere nuovo di [ place]
* * *[strein‹]1) (not known, seen etc before; unfamiliar or foreign: What would you do if you found a strange man in your house?; Whenever you're in a strange country, you should take the opportunity of learning the language.) sconosciuto; straniero2) (unusual, odd or queer: She had a strange look on her face; a strange noise.) strano•- strangeness
- stranger
- strange to say/tell/relate
- strangely enough* * *[streɪndʒ]1) (unfamiliar) sconosciuto, ignoto, estraneo2) (odd) strano, bizzarro, curiosoit is strange (that)... — è strano che...
there's something strange about her — c'è qualcosa di strano o curioso in lei
in a strange way... — stranamente...
3) (unwell)4) form. (new)to be strange to — essere nuovo di [ place]
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58 link
link [lɪŋk]1. nouna. [of chain] maillon mb. ( = connection, Also computing) lien ma. (physically) lierb. ( = establish communication between) relierc. ( = establish logical connection between) établir un lien entre• the police are not linking him with the murder la police n'a établi aucun rapport entre lui et le meurtre• smoking and lung cancer are closely linked il existe un rapport étroit entre le tabagisme et le cancer de poumon4. compounds► link up[persons] se rejoindre ; [firms, organizations] s'associer( = connect) raccorder• the plan to link all schools up to the internet le projet de connecter toutes les écoles à l'Internet* * *[lɪŋk] 1.1) ( in chain) maillon m; fig2) (connection by rail, road) liaison f3) (connection between facts, events) rapport m ( between entre); ( between people) lien m ( with avec)4) ( economic or trading tie) relation f ( with avec; between entre); ( historical or friendly tie) lien m ( with avec; between entre)5) Telecommunications, Radio, Computing liaison f6) ( on a web page) lien m2.transitive verb1) ( connect physically) [road, cable] relier [places, objects]to link A to B ou A and B — relier A à B
to link arms — [people] se donner le bras
2) (relate, establish connection between)to link something to ou with — lier quelque chose à [inflation]; établir un lien entre quelque chose et [fact, crime, illness]
his name has been linked with — son nom a été associé à [deed, name]
3) Computing connecter [terminals]to link something to ou with — connecter quelque chose à [mainframe, terminal]
4) Television, Radio établir une liaison entre [places] (by par)3.linked past participle adjective1) [circles, symbols] entrelacé2) fig [issues, problems] lié•Phrasal Verbs:- link up -
59 tell
tell [tel](preterite, past participle told)a. dire• I told him what/where/how/why je lui ai dit ce que/où/comment/pourquoi• I won't go, I tell you! puisque je te dis que je n'irai pas !• don't tell me you've lost it! ne me dis pas que tu l'as perdu !• I told you so! je te l'avais bien dit !• ... or so I've been told... ou du moins c'est ce qu'on m'a dit• you're telling me! (inf) à qui le dis-tu !• you tell me! je n'en sais rien !• can you tell the time? sais-tu lire l'heure ?• can you tell time? (US) sais-tu lire l'heure ?• can you tell me the time? peux-tu me dire l'heure (qu'il est) ?c. ( = know) how can I tell what he'll do? comment puis-je savoir ce qu'il va faire ?• it was impossible to tell where the bullet had entered il était impossible de dire par où la balle était entrée• you can tell he's clever by the way he talks on voit bien qu'il est intelligent à la façon dont il parled. ( = distinguish) distinguer ; ( = know) savoira. ( = know) savoir• how can I tell? comment le saurais-je ?b. ( = be talebearer) I won't tell! je ne le répéterai à personne !c. ( = have an effect) se faire sentir• their age and inexperience told against them leur âge et leur manque d'expérience militaient contre eux* * *[tel] 1.(prét, pp told) transitive verb1) gen [person] dire [lie, truth]; raconter [joke, story]; prédire [future]; [manual, gauge] indiquerto tell somebody about ou of something — parler de quelque chose à quelqu'un
to tell somebody not to do — gen dire à quelqu'un de ne pas faire; ( forbid) défendre à quelqu'un de faire
to tell somebody how to do/what to do — expliquer à quelqu'un comment faire/ce qu'il faut faire
to tell the time — [clock] indiquer or marquer l'heure; [person] lire l'heure
can you tell me the time please? — peux-tu me dire l'heure (qu'il est), s'il te plaît?
his behaviour tells us a lot about his character — son comportement nous en dit long sur sa personnalité
I told you so! —
it's true, I tell you! — puisque je te dis que c'est vrai!
2) ( deduce)you can tell a lot from the clothes people wear — la façon dont les gens s'habillent est très révélatrice
3) ( distinguish) distinguer2.how can you tell which is which? —
1) ( reveal secret)2) ( be evidence of)3) ( know for certain) savoiras ou so far as I can tell — pour autant que je sache
4) ( produce an effect)3.her inexperience told against her at the interview — son inexpérience a joué contre elle lors de son entretien
to tell oneself — se dire ( that que)
Phrasal Verbs:- tell off- tell on••tell me another! — (colloq) à d'autres! (colloq)
to tell somebody where to get off — (colloq) envoyer promener quelqu'un
you tell me! — je n'en sais rien!, à ton avis?
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60 refer
[rɪ'fəː(r)]vtto refer sb to — ( book) odsyłać (odesłać perf) kogoś do +gen; (doctor, hospital, manager) kierować (skierować perf) kogoś do +gen
to refer the matter to — kierować (skierować perf) sprawę do +gen
to refer the task to — przekazywać (przekazać perf) zadanie +dat
Phrasal Verbs:- refer to* * *[rə'fə:] 1. past tense, past participle - referred; verb( with to)1) (to talk or write (about something); to mention: He doesn't like anyone referring to his wooden leg; I referred to your theories in my last book.) wspomnieć, przytoczyć2) (to relate to, concern, or apply to: My remarks refer to your last letter.) odnosić się3) (to send or pass on to someone else for discussion, information, a decision etc: The case was referred to a higher law-court; I'll refer you to the managing director.) skierować4) (to look for information (in something): If I'm not sure how to spell a word, I refer to a dictionary.) odwołać się•- referee2. verb(to act as a referee for a match: I've been asked to referee (a football match) on Saturday.) sędziować- reference book
- reference library
См. также в других словарях:
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relate */*/*/ — UK [rɪˈleɪt] / US verb Word forms relate : present tense I/you/we/they relate he/she/it relates present participle relating past tense related past participle related 1) [intransitive/transitive] to show or make a connection between two different … English dictionary
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